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Authors: MaryJanice Davidson

BOOK: Undead and Unstable
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Brrrr!

“Betsy, come on.” Laura was trying to sound reasonable. And maybe she did sound reasonable. But I had no interest in what the Antichrist thought was reasonable. The devil was the devil. Laura was … was Laura. My little sister. A good person (when she wasn’t executing rogue vamps or serial killers, or trying to kill me in a fit of rage. Hey, nobody was perfect.).
Not
destined to run hell. “My mother hasn’t had a day off ever. She’s never had a vacation ever.”

“So tell her to register a grievance with the union.” I was utterly unable to summon even the teensiest amount of pity or empathy for the devil. Y’know … because she was
the devil
.

“You’re making jokes—”

“Not really.”

“—but there’s no one for her to turn to. Don’t you get it? There’s no one else. No one but me.”

“Uh, no.” I didn’t like where this was going. At all. And Sinclair had gone dead quiet in my brain again. His face had all the expression of an Easter Island statue.

“Even if I hated her—”

“You do hate her!”

“—I don’t know that I could abandon her once I realized why I was here,” she continued. “D’you know I’m one of the few people who actually knows the answer to the eternal question—”

Do you want fries with that?

“—why am I here?”

“Listen to me, Laura. Very carefully. Okay? Watch my lips: you are not the temp worker of the damned.”

“More jokes,” she sighed.

“I am absolutely not joking!”

“C’mon, guys. Ease up.” Marc was shoving small juice glasses oozing with smoothies at all of us. “Have a drink. We’re just shooting the shit, nobody’s taking over hell right this second.”

“Or ever.”

“Right this second,” he said again, in case I hadn’t heard him two seconds ago. “Besides, Betsy, I think you might be projecting.”

“Oh, really, Dr. Zombie?”

“And when you think you’re cornered, or wrong, you lash out and say mean things,” he added, looking pretty pious for a fucking
zombie
.

“Shut up, you reject from a George Romero wet dream.”

“Elizabeth.”

“And you can shut up, too,” I added, knowing I was acting like a brat, a bitch, and helpless to stop. Or maybe I didn’t want to stop. Hurting my friends’ feelings sometimes seemed worth it if I didn’t have to ponder the truly awful, things like—

“I think you resist Laura maybe taking over hell because you see it as her destiny, just like yours is to rule the vampire nation and maybe even take care of humanity, too, after some awful disaster in the future blots out the sun.” Marc watched me and, when I didn’t leap at him and rip off his face and stuff it down his pants, took a breath (he didn’t need to breathe but … old habits) and added, “Maybe if Laura can refuse her destiny, the thing she’s expected to do, maybe you can, too. Maybe this whole big mess in the future … maybe it can be somebody else’s problem.” Then he shut his eyes with a grimace. “Be gentle. I’ve got no idea how long it’ll take me to grow my nose back.”

“Maybe it
could
be somebody else’s problem,” I said in a watery voice, then downed my smoothie in a monster gulp and abruptly sat down. Vampires weren’t prone to brain freeze, but at least it stopped me from bursting into tears like a six-foot blond baby. “And don’t judge me, okay?”

“I’m not judging you,” he soothed. He came around to my side of the table and rested his clammy zombie hands on my shoulders. “I’m just calling into question every moral and legal decision you’ve made in the last few years.”

“That’s exactly judging me!” I said, indignant, and Jessica laughed so hard she dribbled smoothie down her chin and onto her hot pink T-shirt.

“You shush,” I told her, but she cheerfully disobeyed and kept yukking it up and dripping everywhere. I finally got up and handed her about eighty napkins before she ruined her pants, too.

THIRTY-FOUR

 

We’d finished our smoothies and most of the tension was
gone when Sinclair decided to ruin everything and bring up bad shit again.

“My own, why do you insist on behaving as if you do not have the skills to rule us?”

“Um … because I don’t?” Sinclair was usually smarter than this. And nakeder than this. Wait. That wasn’t right. I really, really needed to have sex with him soon. This was getting ridiculous. Almost a week! Cripes.

“No, he’s right. Your track record’s not that bad,” Jessica said, probably thinking she was soothing me.

“My track record blows.”

“Nuh-uh.”

“Yuh-huh.”

“You did only set that poor kid’s ghost free after how many decades?”

I remembered the kid. God, she’d scared the shit out of me. I hadn’t known until then I could see the dead … the real dead, ghosts, not just vampires. I’d been terrified of her. And the kid … she’d just been sad.

“And then you got rid of a serial killer—”

“Laura did that,” I objected. “I was the one cowering in the corner with the last victim. Believe me, we were both trying to figure out where it all went wrong in our lives. Laura’s the one who swung into action.” And then some. I’d nearly thrown up when I saw what she’d left of him. Oh, sure, a serial killer, he had it coming, right?

Nobody had that coming.

“—and you figured out that evil old librarian had kidnapped Sinclair—”

“Okay, that I will take credit for,” I admitted. “I did eventually realize in between my search for the perfect wedding dress who had stolen my king, and after finding a caterer, I got around to killing her eventually.”

“For which I was grateful, my queen.” He said it with a straight face, but I could sense the smile lurking beneath. I gave him a later-for-you look.

“So one cool thing among dozens of incompetent fuckups.”

“And you didn’t let the werewolves kill all of us when Antonia died. The Werewolf Antonia,” Jessica added because, stop me if you’ve heard this, there were
two
hell-bound Antonias in my life. “In fact, the WIC kind of liked you. Werewolf in Charge,” she added before Marc could ask. “And then you got the devil to let Antonia be alive again!”

Well. Yeah.

“See?”

Maybe.

“Don’t forget, pretty much the first thing you did was kill that Nostro creep … how bad was that guy? And you killed him and took over.”

“It was a little more complicated than that,” I said, “and I wasn’t alone, Sinclair and Tina—”

“And you totally saved Garrett.”

“Well, yeah—”

“And you saved Dickie’s life that time when all those witches were gonna—”

“Um, I didn’t.” Witches? I’d never met a witch in my life, except my stepmother. “Look, guys, I appreciate what you’re doing, but all you’ve proven is that I should seek psychiatric help, not that I should be running the joint. By which I mean the world, eventually.”

“And you tried to save the other Fiends after you saved Garrett. It wasn’t your fault they—”

“Were disgusted with my lame leadership and turned on me in rightful fury?”

“Well, you found out your sister was the Antichrist,” the Antichrist reminded me. “And you took that pretty well.”

If memory served, I’d had a giant tantrum when I found out she was two inches taller and ten times more beautiful than I was, but what the heck. They were trying to be nice. It wasn’t their fault they were completely totally utterly wrong when they thought I sometimes maybe knew what I was doing.

“I think we should get out of this kitchen,” Jessica announced. “Am I the only one who feels like we’ve been in here half a day?”

“You have to admit, it’s pretty interesting.”

“Nope. I don’t.”

Laura shrugged. “Okay, but there’s just one other thing I want to get cleared up…”

“Aw, shit!” Jessica sat up straight and put a hand on her belly, looking puzzled. “What was that?”

“Gas? You’ve eaten … um … everything, I think.” Multiple smoothies on top of the chocolate chips on top of the grapes on top of the Peanut Buster Parfait on top of the Filet-O-Fish on top of the Cinnabon
with
extra frosting.

“I don’t think it’s gas…” She rubbed her stomach and frowned.

“It’s absolutely gas. You said yourself you’re not due until next summer.”

“I thought you were due next month,” Marc commented.

“It depends on where I am,” Jessica explained, like that would make sense to any of us. She must have been getting light-headed from, I dunno, not enough carbs? Too many carbs?

“Owwwww! Guys, I think … I think I might be in labor.”

“No you’re not. You are not! This is not a wacky premise for a Thursday night sitcom. This is a mansion full of the damned and the pregnant, and you are not in labor!”

“Oh, shit, here comes another … ahhhhh … son of a
bitch
.” Marc was getting to his feet. And I was getting into my ninth panic attack of the week. “Betsy, this is labor. These are labor pains. I am in labor, which will eventually result in—aaaahhh, cripes!—a baby.”

“Well, stop it! Stop it right now.” Once again Jessica was trying to make it all about her. The woman had no shame. “I mean it: quit that.”

She sat up so abruptly I flinched. Then she grinned. “Gotcha.”

Startled silence, broken by my wheezing, “You bitch.” The relief was actually making me light-headed.

“Hey, it worked. For a few seconds you forgot all your problems.”

“For a few seconds, I knew terror the likes of which I had never known in life or death, you bitch.”

“You’re welcome,” she said, and I honestly didn’t know whether to punch her or hug her. So I just got the heck out of there.

THIRTY-FIVE

 

An hour or so later, I’d thought of some great rebuttals for
their “you probably wouldn’t totally suck at ruling the world, maybe, at least not
too
much” arguments, but before I could run back to track them all down and berate them with my logic, Sinclair came out of the library and basically scooped me up and tossed me over his shoulder, caveman style.

“This might work on other vampire queens,” I said to his ass as he steadily climbed the stairs to our bedroom, “but it’s leaving this one cold.”

“No. It isn’t.”

“Smug bastard.”

“Yes.”

“I don’t love you,” I told his ass. His marvelous, marvelous ass. Jeez, how many friggin’ stairs were there, anyway? “Not even a little bit.”

“Liars get spanked.”

Oooh, really? That could be all sorts of dirty nasty fun. And frankly, we’d been a little short of dirty nasty fun around here lately. It was high time, no,
past
high time to get naked with the vampire king, naked and sweaty and rude, among other—

Sinclair stopped, two stairs from the top. I could tell he was listening, but had no idea for what. At least I knew better than to shrill, “What is it?” the way annoying movie heroines did when the good guys were trying to listen for the bad guys, only the annoying movie heroine’s “What is it?” comes at just the wrong time for them to—

There was low growling from far down the hall, growling that was getting steadily louder. Lame. And who’d be growling, for God’s sake? Jessica was probably napping by now. Nick/Dick was also napping, unless he’d finished and had gone back to work. Laura didn’t growl. I was pretty sure Marc didn’t, either. In fact, the only logical candidate for a growl was—

“Oh, shit. The full moon!”

Sinclair sighed and put me down.

“With all the crap going on, I totally forgot about the full—”

And here came Antonia, like she’d been cued by the god of missed sexual opportunities. In her wolf form, she was all black, her lush fur the exact color of her messy hair. Her eyes were glowing pools I tried not to stare into—Antonia was pretty touchy on two feet. On
four
, she was a goddamn hurricane of fur and teeth.

It didn’t help that she’d only recently been able to even turn into a wolf during the full moon. See, she’d been born into their Pack, but some Pack members (you can hear the capital
P
, right?) didn’t ever Change. Just looked human all the time, though they weren’t. And these poor guys, they were treated like dying invalids by the ones who could turn into wolves. You know the drill:
Oh you poor thing, I’ve gotta go turn into a wolf now, see ya later … or never.
Like that.

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